ISO&Agent Magazine

News from the Space

November 18, 2013
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news padAmerican Express recently teamed up with Heartland Payment Systems to provide split-processing loans tied to all card transactions rather than just American Express exclusively. The max loan size is $750,000. Prior to this deal American Express and other merchant cash advance companies rarely competed head-to-head. Unless a small business was processing substantial AMEX, they weren’t a candidate for American Express Merchant Financing. I expect them to make similar deals with other card processors.

Lending Club got a valuation boost with a $57 million investment from Yuri Milner’s DST Global and Coatue Management LLC. They’re now worth about $2.3 billion. They are expected to go public in 2014 which will be especially significant given their plans to enter the small business lending space as early as January. Today, alternative small business lenders worth tens of millions or hundreds of millions of dollars are the big shots in the industry. Expect major disruption if Lending Club achieves an IPO valuation in the tens of billions.

Zazma put their own spin on lending by financing the purchases small businesses make. Funds are actually wired directly to the suppliers instead of to the borrower. For now they are only doing up to $5,000 at one time, which is typically the minimum sized deal for the merchant cash advance industry.

ISO&Agent published a great article about merchant cash advance titled, Taming the Wild Frontier.

The end of the year is coming and Capital Access Network, which is now CAN Capital projects they will finish with $800 million in transactions for 2013. 15 years after they started, they are still the biggest in the business.

Factoring Construction Deals: It’s not impossible

April 18, 2013
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The Factoring Place Owner, Steve Ontiveros Specializing in Construction FactoringBeing my first post in the Small Business Corner, allow me to introduce myself. My name is Steve Ontiveros and I’m the founder of The Factoring Place. I’m good at finding the right factoring company for my clients based on their unique situations. Factoring and MCA really aren’t that different. Each company seeking a merchant cash advance is unique, like each factoring client is unique. Not all merchant cash advance companies are alike, and similarly not all factoring companies offer the same program & factoring rate.  I became a factoring broker because I wanted to make sure my clients were getting the very best factoring deal for their unique situation.

Many factors lack the c-c-c-courage needed to fund a construction deal.  Preliminary & Mechanic’s Liens, Payment & Performance Bonds, Progress Billing, and Retention, OH MY! Follow me along the “Yellow Brick Road” to mitigate the common risks of factoring construction deals.y factoring and merchant cash advance brokers turn down or walk away from construction companies seeking working capital. Factoring construction companies is a niche within a niche.  As a broker, understanding the inherent risks of construction factoring can help you find the right factoring firm that will successfully fund your client. Understanding how each factoring company operates is also important to knowing whether or not your client will get funded.

Actually, you don’t have to live in the fantasy world of “Oz” to successfully navigate the unique risks found in a typical construction deal.  When you peel back the curtain inside the “Emerald City Factoring Company,” you’ll find that there are no wizards or wizardry going on at all.  But for this article, I’ll be your Emerald City Factoring Company Wizard. I’ll help you understand construction factoring giving you the confidence to walk the walk and get your construction client funded.

Construction Factoring 101: Preliminary Lien Notice & Mechanic’s Liens

A Preliminary Lien Notice is a formal document sent by the contractor, sub contractor, material supplier, equipment lessor – and factoring company in some cases– to the owner of the project.  This “pre-lien” establishes the right to file a mechanic’s lien later on down the road.  If the pre-lien is sent and the claimant’s bill is paid, the pre-lien has no further legal effect.  However, if the bill is not paid then the claimant may now file a mechanic’s lien on the owner’s property.  An active mechanic’s lien on a property ties that property up, leaving it in a position such that it cannot be sold or transferred to another party until the mechanic’s lien is released.  Roughly 40 states in the US require a preliminary lien to be present before a mechanic’s lien can be enforced–check the laws in your state to see where you stand.

The Emerald City Factoring Company often requires its construction clients to provide evidence of a pre-lien being sent to everyone up the food chain, including the owners.  In fact, Emerald City Factoring Company has been known to file a pre-lien of its own to further protect its position.  True, Emerald City Factoring Company is not a contractor, supplier, or equipment lessor.    But, because Emerald City Factoring Company has a blanket UCC1 on all assets of the client, the factor is indeed a supplier of material and equipment on the job.  Even if the General Contractor argues a factoring company has no legal standing to file a pre-lien, the owner doesn’t care. The owner will simply tell the General Contractor to ensure all invoices are paid to all subcontractors so that the factoring company’s pre-lien won’t magically turn into a mechanic’s lien.  Having the pre-lien in place allows the Emerald City Factoring Company to file a mechanic’s lien if payment is not made, which means the Wizards running the show can sleep well at night.

Construction Factoring 102: Payment & Performance Bonds

Performance bonds are used in the construction industry as a tool for the owner of the property being developed to guarantee that the value of the work will not be lost in the case of an unfortunate event (such as insolvency of the contractor.)  A payment bond guarantees that the contractor will pay the labor and material costs they are obligated to.  Shoddy work, sub-standard materials, and corner-cutting put Emerald City Factor’s factored invoices at risk, because if the owner throws your client off the job, the bonding company can step in and finish the job – and then back charges your factoring client.  It’s unlikely that a bonding company will subordinate to the factoring company, and thus the factor’s lien on the receivables may be primed by the big bad bonding company.

So, how do you prevent the Wicked Witch of the West coming through to spoil the party, kick your contractor off the job, and call in the bonding company to clean up the mess?  Unlike Dorothy, clicking your heels and repeating “there’s no place like home” won’t prevent the damage done by that under-performing contractor factoring client of yours.

Invite “Captain Obvious” to work for the Emerald City Factoring Company.  He’s the guy that usually shows up after the disaster struck, and is rich with advice on what you should have done.  These are usually “DUH” moments but, in retrospect, they were so obvious and simple that you may have over looked them.  Here’s what Captain Obvious has taught us over the years:

Construction Factoring Company

  • Have your contractor client share the bid file with you.  Go over each scope with a fine tooth comb.  Ask the contractor to tell you what % gross profit was built into each unique scope.  Use common sense to work out where the estimate may be wildly optimistic.  Is there enough gross profit in the estimate for them to have “oh crap” room?  More importantly, is there enough room in the estimate to cover the costs of your factoring services?
  • Ask about the job costing engine that the contractor is using.  Are they plugging in the job budget before the job starts, and then recording costs against the original budget?  Ask the contractor how long it takes for their AP accounting staff to enter job costs against each job.  The costs need to get added to the job cost engine almost immediately after they are incurred.
  • Ask to be shown a copy of a recent “over/under” billing report.  This report will show whether or not the job is hemorrhaging cash as the job is happening.   If the job is over-billed, the contractor is in a strong cash position on the job.  If it’s under billed, it means the contractor has spent more on the job than they have yet to bill.  Running jobs under billed for too long is probably what brought the contractor to you in the first place, so don’t be surprised to see this – just monitor it so that you know just how bad the situation might be.
  • If your contractor’s eyes gloss over when you ask them about job budgets and job costing and over / under billing, then you might have a different sort of problem on your hand.  Without these tools in place, the contractor will have a tough time knowing whether or not he’s profitable and whether or not he has the longevity to complete the job.  Yes, even with factoring company in place, there’s no avoiding disaster when working with a contractor who doesn’t watch his budgets.
  • Get a hard hat and a vest with fashionable fluorescent reflective tape.  Travel to the job site at least once a week to make sure progress is being made and to be visible to your client.  You’re in luck if you have a pick-up truck and even better if you have a pick-up truck with a diesel fuel tank in the bed.  This way you can top off the heavy equipment on the job site so that they’re ready for a full day’s use tomorrow!
  • While at the job site, cozy up to the project manager / superintendent that is in charge of your client’s performance.  He’s usually the person who will approve or deny the progress billing requests.  Be up-front with him and tell him that you’re the “money guy” behind your client.  Ask the project manager regularly about progress on the project.  Are there dicey issues that you can take up with your client to make the job run smoothly?
  • Be the guy that a) brings the donuts and coffee into the planning meetings and b) has a cooler full of sodas and snacks for the laborers.  Develop relationships with people on the job.  Not only are you looking after your investment, but you’re sure to get “insider” information about the performance of your client.  Another added benefit to being on the job site consistently?  More clients.  As you’re talking with the project manager, it’ll be no secret what you do.  I can’t tell you how many clients Emerald City Factors has earned as a result of job-site schmoozing.
  • Most of all, be useful on the job site, and then get out of there.  Bring lunch to the trades people.  Ask your questions.  Get invoice approvals.  Find out when the city / county inspector is coming to inspect your client’s work (and be there for those inspections!)  Do no harm.
  • Require that your contractor provide you with weekly job cost reports.  Measure the actual job costs against the original job budgets.  If you start to see a budget getting to the end of its life, investigate.  Find out if there are change orders that you don’t know about.  Maybe it’s just job cost entry errors (costs being tagged to the wrong element of the job).  Don’t accept your client’s word for it when he tells you “I’m on time and under budget.”  Expect that he’s not, and verify with proof in the job cost / budget reports.

Construction Invoice Factoring Loans

Construction Factoring 103: Progress Billing & Retention

The c-c-c-cowardly Lion will tell you that the contractual ability to off-set the cost of defects or repairs against previously approved billings is what prevents him from getting into the construction factoring game.  In other words, the Lion is afraid that even after the general contractor approves an invoice, somehow he or she can still legally refuse to pay any or all of the approved invoice.  This is typically when retention comes into play.  Retention is a process by which the general contractor will hold back usually 10% of a progress payment.  This 10% is not paid to the contractor until the end of the job, when all the punch list items are completed, and when the owner is satisfied with the material and workmanship.  Think of it as a “reserve” account of sorts.

Be sure you understand that a progress billing invoice may have retention – if so, don’t advance against the full value of the invoice.  Gauge your advance based on the invoice amount AFTER retention is taken out.  Don’t fund unless and until you get the general contractor to physically sign your approval letter.  Put language on your approval letter that says something to the effect of: “Invoice approved without offsets or deductions” and then pray that you don’t ever have to defend that language – a costly adventure in the American Justice System!

Construction Factoring 104: Distance Makes the Heart Grow Fonder

Emerald City Factoring Company is located in the Heart of Oz.  Let’s say that your construction client’s project is all the way over in Kansas, so there is no chance that you or your wizard staff can visit the job site to protect your investment and market to others on the site.  In that case contract with a broker, or a construction manager, to visit the site on your behalf.  Get some eyes and ears on the ground at the job site, and be sure to review the budgets and job cost reports on a regular basis.  If you want to get really creative, partner up with a bookkeeper who is local to the construction client and job site.  Ask that your construction client consider using a chosen bookkeeper who knows how to manage construction job costing and billing.  You’ll be singing the praises of Glinda, the Good Bookkeeping Witch of the North before you can say “there’s no place like home, there’s no place like home, there’s no place like home.”

The c-c-c-cowardly Lion gets Courage

It’s always easier to get something done when you have a little bit of experience.  Dorothy didn’t get home without taking a few calculated risks.  Consider funding a small deal, perhaps a spot factor on a small project will give you some practice but won’t cause you to lose sleep.  You can learn the lingo of the contractor (and flatter your client) by asking questions about the business.  Or, consider working with non-competing factoring company who does construction and let them teach you the ropes.

Just watch, before long you’ll be chanting in your sleep: “There’s no factoring like construction factoring…”

Steve Ontiveros is the founder and president of The Factoring Place, Inc.  a privately held full service factoring brokerage firm specializing in construction factoring deals (including progress billing.)  He can be reached at steve@thefactoringplace.com or 510.223.1285

Betting on the Future With Merchant Cash Advance

November 14, 2012
Article by:

iso&agentAn excerpt of the article in ISO&Agent’s November/December 2012 Issue:

“The business of merchant cash advances is changing, and ISOs are finding they need to do the same to keep up.

Long considered a niche product ISOs could rely on to add value to a contract, today’s cash advance market is highly competitive and heavily saturated. The situation creates a tradeoff for ISOs. On one hand, more merchants are aware of cash advance, which means there’s more demand for it. At the same time, more financial services providers are offering it, and that means greater competition.

With credit card companies offering cash advance and alternative lending, it can be tougher for ISOs to build loyalty among the merchants who receive them, ISOs and merchant cash advance providers say. ISOs might also have to overcome the negative reputation merchant cash advance has in some circles.

ISOs should rethink their strategies and stay on top of merchants when it comes to cash advance, says Sean Murray, CEO of Raharney Capital, a New York consulting firm that caters to merchant cash advance companies. “You know the saying, ‘Always be closing?’ Well, you should always be offering merchant cash advance,” he says.

It’s not uncommon for an agent to offer a merchant cash advance in January, then come back to try again in March only to find that 10 other ISOs hit up the merchant in February, Murray says. “You can’t just throw it in there casually every few months. Everyone is marketing cash advance,” he says.

But opportunities arise…”

Read the full article in the November/December magazine available on the site.

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